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Scott Phillips The Vortex Of Success Creed is a phenomenon.
They're the first band in history
to have four number-1 rock radio
singles from a debut album. (By the way, that album, My Own Prison, went on to have a
remarkable seven consecutive number-1 rock radio singles.) Their second album, Human Clay, entered the Billboard
charts at number-1 and has since sold over ten million copies.
In 1998, Creed's first full year out, they took
Billboard
Music Award's Rock Group Of The Year, Song Of The Year ("Higher"),
Welcome To The Big Time, and
2 For 2 awards. Last year, Creed won a
Grammy for Best Rock Song ("With Arms Wide Open"), as well as American
Music
Awards for favorite alternative artist and favorite pop/rock
album (Human Clay).
Creed's newly
released album, Weathered,
will undoubtedly attain similar heights. What makes this all the more
amazing is that
Creed is the band in which Scott Phillips basically cut
his drumming teeth.
Phillips didn't start playing drums
until he was eighteen. Although he
wanted to play the instrument in the sixth grade, when he first got
into marching band,
Phillips' parents encouraged him to begin his
musical journey on a melodic instrument. So he took piano lessons
for
about four years and then played saxophone throughout middle school,
until his senior year of high school. That's
when Scott finally put his
foot down: "I'm either playing drums or I'm not playing at all!"
In his ongoing
battle to become a drummer, when he was in high school
Phillips borrowed kits to play with a local cover band, until
his
grandfather eventually bought him a used set. Then he went about
absorbing everything musical he could at the junior
college in Madison,
Florida where his dad was a physiology professor. Although heavily
influenced by Living Colour's Will
Calhoun ("I really dug his hi-hat
work"), Soundgarden's Matt Cameron and Metallica's Lars Ulrich were
also early
inspirations. Phillips consumed the rock music of the day, in addition to the standards that he played in his college jazz
band.
After junior college, Phillips transferred to Florida State University
in Tallahassee - as a business major. For
the first year, he hardly
touched the drums. But Scott remained obsessed with finding a new
drumset, even though he
didn't have any money. In the summer of '94,
Phillips moved into a house with two other guys, one of whom turned
him
on to the classic rock of The Doors, Led Zeppelin, and Pink Floyd.
Phillips began to jam with that roommate, which
ultimately motivated
the drummer to get back to his first love and find a band.
Enter
Creed.
MD: Now that you're in the biggest band in the land, how does a rock star find time to
keep his chops up?
Scott: Whenever you're on tour, there's no problem keeping your chops up
because you're doing it all the time. But before we made Weathered,
we needed the downtime, because we were
exhausted. I think it was good
for us to get away from our instruments, and get away from the life and
the scene. We needed
to get back to a normal life, where people don't
wait on you hand and foot. I must say I think we've all stayed
pretty
levelheaded considering the amount of success we've had.
MD: How will you get back into
shape after being on vacation?
Scott: I think the pre-production process has helped a lot,
working on the
chops to get back into the studio. Then before we go out
on tour, we'll do a week or two of pre-production with full
energy,
full sets, full pyro - all of it.
MD: How does the music differ between live and the studio for you?
Scott: It's four times more intense live than it is in the
studio. There's no break after you do a
song. There's no ten-minute
breather to go drink a bottle of water. You're right into the next
song. I think the thing
that makes it easier to endure, though, is the
crowd. They keep the adrenaline on full throughout the show, and that
helps.
MD: Does the adrenaline make you push your tempos?
Scott: A little bit. Mark
starts about sixty percent of the
songs on guitar and then the drums come in after that. Sometimes he's
right on and
sometimes he's racing. He's an awesome guitar player, but
sometimes adrenaline can speed you up.
MD: Aside from keeping the tempo, what does this band need from you?
Scott: I
think my openness to their ideas, as well as having
ideas of my own, are what's needed in this band. There are
some
drummers I've come across who are pretty headstrong and feel that what
they come up with is the only way to do
it. But I've always been very
receptive to the other bandmembers' suggestions. I think it's important
for me to
sit back and listen to a whole song, with or without drums,
and be able to add to it without my ego getting in the way.
Robyn Flans
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